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Calcium Sensitivity and the Effect of the Calcium Sensitizing Drug Pimobendan in the Alcoholic Isolated Rat Atrium

47

Citations

19

References

1999

Year

Abstract

We compared the effect of inotropic interventions (isoproterenol and pimobendan) and the relation between Ca2+ and isometric twitch force in atrial muscle from control rats and rats that had consumed alcohol for 2 months. At extracellular Ca2+ concentrations of 1-4 mM, alcohol atria developed less force than the controls. The median effective concentration (EC50) for extracellular Ca2+ was 3.2 +/- 0.01 mM for the alcohol group and 2.8 +/- 0.001 mM for the control group, whereas at maximal Ca2+, developed force was the same in both groups. To test whether the myofilament response to Ca2+ is altered with chronic alcohol consumption, we measured the relation between Ca2+ and force of atrial fiber bundle preparations extracted with Triton X-100. The Ca2+-force relation of alcohol atria (EC50 = 2.4 +/- 0.001 microM) was significantly shifted to the right of that of the control atria (EC50 = 1.94 +/- 0.001 microM Ca2+). Compared with controls, the alcohol atria demonstrated a significant depression in the inotropic effect of the beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol over a broad concentration range (10(-9)-10(-6) M). We also tested the effect of pimobendan, an inotropic agent with both phosphodiesterase-inhibiting and myofilament Ca2+-sensitizing actions. Developed force at concentrations of pimobendan <75 microM was similar between groups. However, at concentrations of pimobendan >75 microM, the developed force in alcohol atria was significantly less than control. Our results indicate that 2 months of alcohol consumption is associated with decreases in myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity and altered responsiveness to different inotropic agents.

References

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